Program
Time |
Event |
|
14:00 - 14:10
|
Welcome - Kelsey Granger & Renée Krusche |
|
14:00 - 16:00
|
Animal Allegories and Imagery |
|
14:10 - 14:30 |
› Animals, Dreams, and Altered States in Medieval Narratives - Rebecca Doran, University of Miami |
|
14:30 - 14:50 |
› From Hunted Prey to Symbols of Life: Historical and Mythological Rabbits in China and Japan - Anne Schmiedl, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg |
|
14:50 - 15:10 |
› How To Earn Your Stripes: The Practice of Tattooing Animal Motifs on Human Skin and Its Social Implications in Ancient and Premodern China - Raffaela Rettinger, Julius-Maximilians-University |
|
15:10 - 16:00
|
Discussion |
|
16:00 - 16:10
|
Coffee break |
|
16:00 - 18:00
|
Defining Animals |
|
16:10 - 16:30 |
› “Without a Dog to Bark at Night in Warning”: Dogs in the Creation and Patrolling of Boundaries - Kelsey Granger, University of Cambridge |
|
16:30 - 16:50 |
› Silkworm-Human Relations in Middle Period Chinese Buddhism - Stuart Young, Bucknell University, Pennsylvania, |
|
16:50 - 17:10 |
› “Crawling Across Representational Mediums and Taxonomic Classifications: Insect Subjects in 16th century Paintings, Manuscripts, and Printed Books” - Daniel Burton-Rose, Wake Forest University |
|
17:10 - 18:00
|
Discussion |
|
Time |
Event |
|
14:00 - 15:50
|
Animal Husbandry and Administration |
|
14:10 - 14:30 |
› The Frontier is Here: Horses and Horse Culture in the Early Ming Court - Noa Grass, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Independent Scholar |
|
14:30 - 14:50 |
› The Voyages of Eels: The Characteristics, Breeding Evolution, and Consumption of Eels in Modern Taiwan - Chunghao Kuo, Taipei Medical University |
|
14:50 - 15:10 |
› Food, Medicine and Law: Eating Donkey in Chinese Society from Medieval China to the Qing Dynasty - Shih-hsun Liu, National Palace Museum |
|
15:00 - 15:50
|
Discussion |
|
15:50 - 16:00
|
Coffee break |
|
16:00 - 17:45
|
Treating Animals |
|
16:10 - 16:30 |
› Livestock – Part of More Than One World Veterinary approaches to livestock in Republican China - Renee Krusche, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg |
|
16:30 - 16:50 |
› Military Medicine and the Causational Feedback Loop Between Animal and Human Institutional Medicine in Imperial China. - Forrest McSweeney, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign |
|
16:40 - 17:30
|
Discussion |
|
17:30 - 17:45
|
Roundtable: 'Future Trajectories for Chinese Animal Studies' |
|
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